Monday, January 05, 2015

“Clariel”
by Garth Nix. I bought this at Scott Westerfeld’s signing. We all argued about
who should get to read it first, and whether one should start over with
Sabriel. Fortunately the boy had school stuff, and Ed was reading the Brust I
read in October (as he put it, “how did I not know about this author before?”)
so I got to go first. Which is only fair, since I paid.

I enjoyed this book more than I’ve enjoyed anything in a while.
Having just read the other three, there was a spot where I realized this was not
going to end well. The most annoying thing was that I read it first, and none
of my family were reading fast enough to keep up, and when I finished I wanted
to talk to someone about it.

“From the Earth to the Moon” by Jules Verne. The boy is taking a SF
survey course this term, and this was the second book on it (the first was
Frankenstein, which I’ve already read). He told me this one was cute, so of
course I asked to read it. He also told me that his prof says JV is the father
of hard science fiction and HG Welles is the father of soft science fiction. I
asked what Mary Shelley is the father of, then, but he didn’t have a good
answer. He also told me the math wasn’t that far off. I’ll take his word for
that. He’d told me the ending was sudden and there was a sequel written 15
years later, which he’d read a synopsis of just for satisfaction. I did the
same thing because he was right.

“Year
of the Ladybird” by Graham Joyce. My older sister provides
little in the way of gift guidance and doesn’t really need things, which can be
a bad thing, except when it means I can buy her books I want to read that I
think she will like. That’s how I got this. If I hadn’t seen the dreadful
British show Hi-de-Hi! I might not have really understood the setting. It was
really good.

“Aloft”
by Chang-Rae Lee. There was a review about anotherbook by him in Locus in oh, April or so, and I thought to myself, “I
have something else by him!” The review wasn’t glowing, and I got this from my
sister years ago, who wasn’t blown away by it either, but I added it to the TBR
pile. Figuring I would get loads of books for Christmas, I started this to fill
the gap.

It was not the book for me. About seventy pages in I started
hoping the main character had killed his dead wife. Then he started to talk about
her death, and clearly he hadn’t done it, and I started hoping he turned out to
be an unreliable narrator and would say, 20 pages from the end, Liar-style,
“Oh, none of that was true. I killed her.” One saving grace was when a
character came down with my favorite cancer (if one can have such a thing),
non-hodgkins lymphoma. The narrator’s voice was extremely tiresome. On the
back, one of the blurbs said “elliptical”, and oh yeah, way too much. That
reviewer did not lie. Neither of my sisters would cop to having given this to
me. I think I might have enjoyed one of his earlier books more.

“Language
Shock” by Michael Agar. I
saw this on my sister’s shelf while I was visiting her at Christmas, and pulled
it down. It’s a book about how learning a language isn’t the same thing as
being fluent in it, and a history of linguistics, written by an ethnographer,
but really it’s a book about writing. As I was reading, I thought it would be
really interesting to learn a language at the same time that I was writing a
novel. That would give the novel a flavor. Alas, I will probably not do this.

Though I did find the conclusion of the book pretty depressing. Or
defeatist. Meh.

“Annihilation”
by Jeff Vandermeer. So, I got two copies of this for Christmas, meaning my family
clearly really thought I should read it. So I did. At first the voice seemed
really off, the dialog stilted, but after a few pages I realized that was on
purpose, and then I was 70 pages in, and then I was done. It seems worth
looking for the sequels.

Friday, January 02, 2015

First Draft“Limering”. Around 111,000 words, and draft. I had made a note for
something completely different and was struggling along and realized that note
was exactly what I needed to wrap all this up. Stupid subconscious and its
erratic filing system! “The Tale of the Tail”. Something light and short for a nice change. Done! “Lucky Kate”. This one appears as a page-a-day
every year or so, doesn’t it? I think this time I have the right plot so the
middle of the story will match the beginning and the end.

Editing“Wind/Water/Salt”. I had
finished November struggling to make sense of Chapter 4, NaNoEditMo having been
pretty much a bust. In December I started moving all sorts of sections around
in chapters 5-10, and made it so I couldn’t figure out where I was, so I spent
a couple of weeks just staring at the binder and opening the word file. Then I
hit on the idea of fixing one character’s POV, and that was the wedge. I’m now
rewriting chapter 6. There’s a lot of work to do! “Lucky Kate”. I
needed something small to carry around while I was away, in case I felt like
editing (as if!). So I cut all the bad sections out of this really quickly and
printed off the “good” 14 pages. If New Year’s is about starting as you mean to
go on, I didn’t start that well. I pulled this out at about 11 pm last night,
way too late to do any good.

Connecting--

Circulating2

Knitting“Ceremonial Armour” (Kaffe Fassett, knit from a photo).
Slogging away on second sleeve (but really mostly ignored. I need to work on
this, if only so I can get the massive pile of balls of yarn put away).“St. Anthony’s Ribbon” (self-designed). Body to armholes, first sleeve attached, second
sleeve finished but not attached.Angee Socks (Sock Innovation). Done. Shorts by Joan McGowan Michael. Done. Mugwarmers
(2014 knitting calendar).One of
my colleagues gave me a “pattern-a-day” calendar for Christmas last year, and
she asked if I’d made anything from it yet. That made me feel guilty, and guilt
is a great motivator. I made five of these
suckers. They take about an hour each. After the third, I got bored and started
deviating from the pattern, which improved things.Pirate
socks. Ed accidentally took one to work in
his sweatshirt, and while itching, pulled it out in a meeting. One of his
colleagues said “is that a pirate sock?” He said yes, and she asked if I took
commissions. Ahem, just this once. Then the person kind of asked for a pair for
someone else and I wigged out. I want to knit something for myself for a
change! Vinterlys
(Norsk Strikkedesign). Lace and cable
panel started.